˜yÐÄvlog

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dorter

or »å´Ç°ù·³Ù´Ç³Ü°ù

[ dawr-ter ]

noun

  1. a dormitory, especially in a monastery.


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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of dorter1

1250–1300; Middle English dortour < Old French < Latin »å´Ç°ù³¾Ä«³ÙÅ°ù¾±³Ü³¾ dormitory
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Matilda Sheldon, the subprioress, admitted to having left the chapter, but denied that she had done so for the reason attributed and said that she did not know of the departure of the other nuns, until she saw them in the dorter.

From

Sometimes it was said that she failed to dine in the frater or to sleep in the dorter, sometimes that she was a poor financier, and in two cases the charge of favouritism was made; but the complaints at these sixteen houses were, on the whole, insignificant.

From

When the salutary labour of hand and brain ordained by St Benedict no longer found a place in his life, he was delivered over bound to an endless routine of dorter, church, frater and cloister, which stretched from day to night and from night to day again.

From

Injunctions order them to be excluded now from dorter, now from frater, now from fermery, according as visitation showed them to be in the habit of entering one part of a house or another.

From

The Bishop cut the Gordian knot for her by ordering all seculars to be turned out of the dorter.

From

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